Win at roulette thanks to machine created by a Mathematician

• It gives you a possibility of tipping the odds by expelling the numbers that are ‘unlikely’

• Calibrating of the ball’s speed and the spinning wheel is involved

• To win on average, users should increase their odds by 3%

There is hardly a player in the world who has not dreamt of the ways to tip the odds in his favour playing roulette. One physicist proclaims about the success in solving this task. But do not think that the gambling establishments will take it lying down.

A professor at Berkley, the University of California, Richard Muller, states that he knows how to solve this issue, writing on question site Quora. His colleague presented the physics-based method to beat the roulette table, which applies the ‘bet in play’ rule, giving the chance to put bets even after the wheel begins to spin and the ball is released but until the point ‘no more bets’.

“In that second or two, there is enough information to allow a measurement and computation that will, for example, double your odds of winning,” reveals Muller.

As his ‘colleague’ explains, if you rule out half of the numbers that are unlikely, your odds can shift in your favour.

“You don’t have to predict the number where it will fall. You only have to increase your odds by 3 percent to go from losing on average to winning on average,” he told.

However, the method was going to be tested by a casino contraption useful for the roulette table.
“He built a device with a switch for his toe in which he tapped each time the ball spun around; with a separate switch he tapped each time the wheel turned. This provided enough information for his small pocket computer to signal him back – with a tap to his leg – where he should place his bet. He had to calibrate each wheel, but he did that by watching and testing before he started betting.”

But everyone is interested in the name of this colleague. It is expected to be former Berkley student and mathematician, who together with his fellow student created a roulette-beating system.
As casinos in the US is unable to search people, they have wonderfully lobbied to be able to expel people from gambling establishment without cause.

Muller remarks: “They choose to do that only when they see someone consistently beating the odds. They can’t get their money back, but they can stop losing. Indeed, my friend (who was then a graduate student at Berkeley) was put on the list. His name and photo were shared by all the casinos in Nevada (and maybe worldwide), and his gambling for profit career was at an end. He says he almost made enough money to pay for the roulette wheel he had purchased to perfect his instrument at home before going out ‘into the field.”